Los Angeles, CA – Rabbis Create New Seal ‘Peulat Sachir’ For Kosher Business Ethics

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    Rabbi Daniel KorobkinLos Angeles, Ca – Seeking to accentuate Jewish traditions that place a premium on ethical integrity, Los Angeles Orthodox rabbis are encouraging local businesses to sign up for a new seal of certification that ensures employers are treating workers fairly and humanely.

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    The move comes in response to allegations over the past year that the nation’s largest kosher slaughterhouse, Agriprocessors in Postville, Iowa, routinely violated the rights of its employees, many of them undocumented workers and many of them underage.

    “We have always considered ourselves to be a light onto the nations — we’re the ones who are supposed to be a paradigm and example and role model for the rest of the world of what it means to be an ethical, moral, Godly person,” said Rabbi Daniel Korobkin, leader of Kehillat Yavneh in Hancock Park. “If the world or if the media is looking askance, for whatever reason, at the Orthodox community, then it behooves us to address the issues.”

    Korobkin rallied his colleagues, Rabbi Elazar Muskin of Young Israel of Century City and Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky of B’nai David-Judea Congregation, to address the national crisis in kosher confidence by turning an eye toward businesses that serve the Jewish community on a local level.

    They will offer, at no cost, a rabbinic seal of approval to any business or institution that volunteers to undergo scrutiny to verify that employees are being treated according to local, state and federal labor laws. The certificate will not be tied to kashrut in any way.

    “We felt we had to do a kiddush Hashem [sanctification of God’s name], and the kiddush Hashem was to be really concerned about the employees and how they are being treated,” Muskin said. “It has nothing to do with kashrut — this goes way beyond kosher eateries and butcher shops and bakeries. We want to know our schools and shuls and businesses are treating employees correctly.”

    The three rabbis, and Rabbi Steven Weil of Beth Jacob, introduced the concept to their congregants in sermons during the High Holy Days. They have volunteered their own synagogues to be analyzed first and then within the next few months, hope to expand to other shuls, schools and businesses, starting mainly with the Pico-Robertson corridor and reaching out as the project grows.

    The Los Angeles group is calling itself Peulat Sachir: Ethical Labor Initiative, based on language from the verse in Leviticus 19 that prohibits an employer from withholding wages overnight from a worker.

    “Whereas we are appropriately extraordinarily careful about the laws of kashrut, clearly we have an attitude that is less rigorous and perhaps even somewhat lackadaisical when it comes to this whole other vitally important area of Jewish law,” Kanefsky said. “A religious community has to be very concerned about kashrut, about education, about mikvah [ritual bath], and it has to be very concerned that the people we interact with on a regular basis are being treated in way that is halachically proper.”

    Peulat Sachir will involve itself in six areas: minimum wage, overtime, rest and meal breaks, workers compensation, leave policies and anti-discrimination protections. A lay board of labor lawyers, businesspeople and others with expertise in the field will analyze business practices by looking at paperwork and talking with employees.

    The board will not deal with the complex area of immigration status. Labor laws apply equally to documented and undocumented workers, explained Craig Ackermann, a labor lawyer and lay leader on the project.

    Businesses will not have to pay for certificates, but the rabbis acknowledge that businesses may have to spend more to qualify for the certificate, if, for instance, they have to start paying for overtime, giving paid leave or making sure workers get appropriate breaks.

    Whether businesses which are not now in compliance will risk having to pass those costs on to customers is an open question.

    “As people committed to halacha (Jewish law), we pay what has to be paid so we can fulfill the halacha — we do it for kashrut, we do it to teach our children Torah. Should we not do it for the halacha of following the law of the land or of how we treat our employees?” Kanefsky asked.

    The halachic concept of “dina demalchuta dina,” the law of the land is the halacha, makes legal adherence and Jewish law one and the same, he pointed out.

    Ackermann guesses that the first businesses to respond positively will be those that are already in compliance with labor laws.

    The rabbis are hoping that once consumers begin to ask for the certificate or more heavily patronize businesses that are certified, business owners will see the benefits, both moral and monetary, to being able to display a Peulat Sachir certificate in the window.

    “We’re hoping this is something store owners won’t be able to dismiss easily,” Kanefsky said. “And frankly, the idealist in me believes that store owners will want to be a part of this mitzvah of raising awareness about this in our community.”

    Over the next few weeks, the rabbis will continue to constitute the lay board and will reach out to businesses and different segments of the community. They are contacting leaders of the Iranian community, because a large percentage of the businesses on Pico Boulevard are Iranian owned. They are also reaching out to the right wing of the Orthodox community, which on a national level has been wary of similar projects.

    That debate came into focus last month, when the right-wing Agudath Israel of America reacted tepidly to an announcement from the centrist Orthodox Rabbincal Council of America (RCA) that it is creating a guide to labor ethics to be distributed not only to kosher producers but to all businesses.

    The RCA, which serves as the halachic adviser for the Orthodox Union (OU) kashrut certification agency, said it will write into kosher supervision contracts the need for companies to comply with all local and federal laws regarding labor and environmental issues. While the OU has long had a rule on the books that its certified companies must be in compliance with the law, this gives more teeth to the provision and raises awareness among kosher purveyors.

    The RCA’s new guidelines will also delineate talmudic and biblical business ethics beyond American law, which it hopes businesses will voluntarily adopt.

    Korobkin expects that the ethics initiative in Los Angeles will spread to other communities.

    “I am hopeful that this will raise a greater level of awareness within various elements of the Orthodox community that this is an issue that needs to be addressed,” Korobkin said. “I think many times we in the Orthodox community want to know how to react to crisis, and sometimes the way we react is by having a tehillim [psalm reciting] rally, or we speak about the need to daven [pray] harder, or to do teshuvah [repentance]. We feel this is form of teshuvah, as well — this is a form of raising awareness in certain areas where there is room for improvement. We can act as a shining example to society at large and to other communities.”

    For more information on the Ethical Labor Initiative, call (310) 276-9269.


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    18 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    What about health laws? There are a few FILTHY restaurants in the community that should be cleaned up or closed down. The County of Los Angeles has a “A”
    “B” “C” grade system. New York has no such system and many restaurants in and around New York and New Jersey are disgustingly dirty and a health hazard. Hashgochos should cover a high standard of cleanliness as well as kashrus! Setting up another “WORKER’S UNION” under the guise of political or religious correctness will only raise prices for consumers. Not a good idea.

    critic
    critic
    15 years ago

    While noble in intentions I feel that such a seal would have the opposite effect it intends. You create an environment in which businesses that dont have this seal are then considered practitioners of unethical business practices, when most likely they are just not looking to fork over anymore money, especially during these rough economic times.

    AuthenticSatmar
    AuthenticSatmar
    15 years ago

    These same Rabbonim hold that one may drink milk that is not Cholov Yisroel, because there are laws in place to protect the milk. By creating this new “seal” they are admitting that the laws alone are not enough. If that is so, how can they continue to drink non cholov yisroel milk?

    Concerned Member
    Concerned Member
    15 years ago

    critic victor:27…

    It says “at no cost” in the article.

    nauseating
    nauseating
    15 years ago

    “If the world or if the media is looking askance, for whatever reason, at the Orthodox community, then it behooves us to address the issues.”

    Only if you are unsure of yourself.

    When your barometer of correctness is set by the media world, you’ll quickly adjust your religiousity to suit another’s whims rather than the shulchan aruch.

    The organized, commercialized kashrus setup is to allow me to know about the ingredients of a commercially produced packaged food. It is and should not be mimiced to tell me what goes on in the offices of the business that produces the food, just as I don’t need to know what goes on in the owner’s bedroom.

    There’s no end to the approval stamps one can try to establish for the myriad of social, moral, religious behavioural choices we constantly make. Those that gravitate to make or accept public stamps of approval for personal, behavioral choices should rather join a repressive, socialistic, tyrannic religion or culture than try to change Judaism and democracy. Chances are they’d clamor to be the tyrant at the “top” too.

    Smells of that to which the statement “Religion is the opium of the masses” refers.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    I live in the Pico-Robertson area of Los Angeles and when I see these new “seals” I will go to the owners and tell them I will not patronize their establishments. They say there will be “no costs” but when all businesses are complying with this new mishigas they will probably need to charge something to cover the expenses of their certification. Of course the cost will be passed on to the consumer.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    it’s just another hechsher. half the issues it doesn’t even mention. a hechsher/seal is just one more band-aid, one more patch to cover up something that should be out in the open. it’s another case of frivolous b.s..

    Joe Stein
    Joe Stein
    15 years ago

    How sad they’ve given in to reform and conservative rabbis pressure. typical L.A politicall correctness bubamaises

    bigwheeel
    bigwheeel
    15 years ago

    It’s very Idealistic. But the question is if all the businesses that are serving consumers would be able [and] willing to comply with the myriad rules & regulations. It would (from a practical standpoint) be best to concentrate [initially] on one area [of compliance]. i.e. Basic Labor Laws in terms of pay, timeliness, leave, etc. ! The regulations about Environmental compliance are best left to the Government agencies and their enforcement system!

    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    15 years ago

    Anonymous 10:03am:

    New York City posts all its restaurant inspection results online. It details any and all violations; this is much more information than a letter grade:

    http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/html/rii/index.shtml

    Charlie Hall
    Charlie Hall
    15 years ago

    Authentic Satmar:

    Relying on the government to certify that milk is in fact from a kosher animal is quite reasonable in a country such as the US where there is no milk produced from non-kosher animals.

    Milhouse
    Milhouse
    15 years ago

    I want to see one of these rabbis point to the se’if in Shulchan Aruch that creates a positive obligation to obey “all local and federal laws regarding labor and environmental issues”.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Reply to # 15:
    Charlie Hall Says: Anonymous 10:03am:
    “New York City posts all its restaurant inspection results online. It details any and all violations; this is much more information than a letter grade”

    Except that you can slip the inspectors a ‘tip’ and many would let your filthy roach
    infested eatery slide! I walk into the kitchen of a restaurant before I eat there. I end up walking out of more food establishments than staying ad eating. I think the City hires their inspectors from the Braille Institute!

    Yekke
    Yekke
    15 years ago

    Does this mean that the establishments will no longer hire illegal aliens? I’d like to see a food establishment operate without them.